McCoy also had a romantic time with Yeoman Barrows in Shore Leave!
JB
JB
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People on this very board have told me the studio wanted more ethnicity on the show (except for Chinese people) that it wasn't just GR. I can't see them saying have lots people of different races but don't let them have romances (though it is possible).
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Or just a day actor that the show runners didn't think of expanding on. Three expensive leads are being paid, the second season was nearly the last, they may have just had other things on their minds. Like the next job.It's possible that, wait for it, oh no ... Takei wasn't that good an actor and there was no good way to work in a romantic interest for the character.
No, Takei not receiving a romantic storyline must be--I say MUST be the work of an inherently racist network, showrunner, and production company. There's just no way Takei was passed over due to a possible lack of acting ability.
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People on this very board have told me the studio wanted more ethnicity on the show (except for Chinese people) that it wasn't just GR. I can't see them saying have lots people of different races but don't let them have romances (though it is possible).
. . .
Wait, what was the problem with casting Chinese people?? lol That's the first I've heard of that.
What's interesting is that the class analyzed your comments. Among the things they noted was your refusal to read any of the links I posted. One student laughed and said, "I can't believe this guy. He doesn't like the questions, so he avoids reading anything that might contradict his opinion. Then he basically wants a signed confession from someone as proof. What world is he living in?" Another said, "If it was that cut and dry, you wouldn't have asked the question in the first place. 'Trek God' should do more reading and less talking." They actually have a homework assignment to analyze yours and other comments here for the logical fallacies and shady argumentative tactics. I'll let you know later this week the highlights of what they came up with.![]()
Nope, sorry, it doesn't wash I never attacked anyone but simply responded to attacks
Your "class" (which is now used as your trolling tool having no bearing on the topic) is irrelevant, as are links you did not feel the need to use in your OP. Only when pressed for evidence did you post links which have nothing to do with the specifics of George Takei / Sulu's alleged treatment on Star Trek.What's interesting is that the class analyzed your comments. Among the things they noted was your refusal to read any of the links I posted.
What's interesting is that the class analyzed your comments. Among the things they noted was your refusal to read any of the links I posted. One student laughed and said, "I can't believe this guy. He doesn't like the questions, so he avoids reading anything that might contradict his opinion. Then he basically wants a signed confession from someone as proof. What world is he living in?" Another said, "If it was that cut and dry, you wouldn't have asked the question in the first place. 'Trek God' should do more reading and less talking." They actually have a homework assignment to analyze yours and other comments here for the logical fallacies and shady argumentative tactics. I'll let you know later this week the highlights of what they came up with.![]()
I suppose if a person posts something on a public forum, you can offer it to others for comment.
Having said that, posting these "responses" (assuming they are real) is low-grade trolling. And really, just poor form.
I don't want to have to give out infractions, so everyone please just chill the hell out. No personal attacks/interpretations of motives.
First, I'm not impressed by your bald attempt to shame people by waving your students' reactions in their faces. If you want to refute an argument here, by all means do so, but don't try to pull an "and my minions agree with me."
The inherent trouble with your question is that it can't actually be answered since no one here has access to information which could confirm or deny it. Is it possible neither Sulu or Uhura got a romance because of racism? Is it also possible it just didn't happen because of the luck of the draw? Is either of these things provable unless a smoking gun appears in the form of a memo?
I short, the only answers you're going to get are going to be gut-checked speculation.
I will say "factually" that the production apparently didn't think George was a bad actor. As I recall, one memo regarding the actor contracts actually calls him out as one their "better" actors. I'll try to find it.
Still seems like someone just needs to ask George Takei. He probably isn't unbiased, but is the only one alive who can give any type of insight into the issue.
It's certainly possible, but there's no "smoking gun" confession from Takei or anyone else either for that situation. Of course, the question of why he felt that way might be germane, too. For instance, if he just felt that as an actor he couldn't convey a romantic situation realistically, that's one issue. If he felt that as a person of color, the audience would not accept it -- that it was taboo or even embarrassing -- that could just as easily feed into an issue of bigotry.HI, Gassy_Man,
I would be interested in your thoughts along the line of:
Is it possible that Takei was comfortable in his own skin, and did not want the romance part with the opposite sex, but was happy with the combat and command and action and dialog he did get?
Why would anyone be shamed if they did not think what they did was shameful? If the reasoning and behavior is something to be proud of, then by all means, be proud. Keep doing it. Use it among educated people, and see if it works.First, I'm not impressed by your bald attempt to shame people by waving your students' reactions in their faces. If you want to refute an argument here, by all means do so, but don't try to pull an "and my minions agree with me."
The inherent trouble with your question is that it can't actually be answered since no one here has access to information which could confirm or deny it. Is it possible neither Sulu or Uhura got a romance because of racism? Is it also possible it just didn't happen because of the luck of the draw? Is either of these things provable unless a smoking gun appears in the form of a memo?
I short, the only answers you're going to get are going to be gut-checked speculation.
I will say "factually" that the production apparently didn't think George was a bad actor. As I recall, one memo regarding the actor contracts actually calls him out as one their "better" actors. I'll try to find it.
But the fact that the two times he went after her, he was either the "opposite" person he was in the traditional universe or under some sort of inebriated influence suggests it wasn't simply a straightforward romantic issue. Moreover, putting people of color with other people of color is viewed by some people as bigoted, in part because this country literally once had laws that said that was the only arrangement possible among minorities. Even as recent as a year ago, there were many people "outraged" over a Superbowl commercial for cereal that showed a biracial couple with a biracial child, and that was in 2014.Mirror Sulu pursued Uhura, who he thought was Mirror Uhura. I'm not seeing any racism there.
The novels often do in places the show did not -- I read The Entropy Effect when it first came out, and I recall an interview with Vonda McIntyre where she literally said she wrote a romance for Sulu because he was conspicuously absent in having one in the TV series. She also made it an interracial romance.I'd like to recommend that the OP read Peter David's novel "The Captain's Daughter", it does a really good job of elaborating on the romance that gave Sulu his daughter. It's one of my favourite novels actually, an under-rated gem.![]()
I hate the Dr. McCoy love stories, though, and Praise be to Allah, there's only like 2 of them: Nancy the Salt Addict and that Oracle woman. Bones was already a bit old to be Playing the Field, he didn't need no romancing, he was already given plenty else to do.
They are real, and I didn't think they were trolling because they directly addressed the specious reasoning of people who seemed pretty dismissive and hostile.What's interesting is that the class analyzed your comments. Among the things they noted was your refusal to read any of the links I posted. One student laughed and said, "I can't believe this guy. He doesn't like the questions, so he avoids reading anything that might contradict his opinion. Then he basically wants a signed confession from someone as proof. What world is he living in?" Another said, "If it was that cut and dry, you wouldn't have asked the question in the first place. 'Trek God' should do more reading and less talking." They actually have a homework assignment to analyze yours and other comments here for the logical fallacies and shady argumentative tactics. I'll let you know later this week the highlights of what they came up with.![]()
I suppose if a person posts something on a public forum, you can offer it to others for comment.
Having said that, posting these "responses" (assuming they are real) is low-grade trolling. And really, just poor form.
I don't want to have to give out infractions, so everyone please just chill the hell out. No personal attacks/interpretations of motives.
But that's the funny thing about it. He may or may not address the issue, if it happened.First, I'm not impressed by your bald attempt to shame people by waving your students' reactions in their faces. If you want to refute an argument here, by all means do so, but don't try to pull an "and my minions agree with me."
The inherent trouble with your question is that it can't actually be answered since no one here has access to information which could confirm or deny it. Is it possible neither Sulu or Uhura got a romance because of racism? Is it also possible it just didn't happen because of the luck of the draw? Is either of these things provable unless a smoking gun appears in the form of a memo?
I short, the only answers you're going to get are going to be gut-checked speculation.
I will say "factually" that the production apparently didn't think George was a bad actor. As I recall, one memo regarding the actor contracts actually calls him out as one their "better" actors. I'll try to find it.
Still seems like someone just needs to ask George Takei. He probably isn't unbiased, but is the only one alive who can give any type of insight into the issue.
Of course they will learn. But they will also learn that some opinions work better than others, and the will of a group does not constitute automatically either a valid or defensible response. What they are learning from so many of the posts here -- beyond logical fallacies to avoid -- is that even if a show espouses liberal thinking, and even if the fans like to think about themselves in this light, reality and practice often are not the same things.I don't know the answer, but I was just making a little joke.
SPOCK: Very little
Well, it just seems difficult to find an answer to something that would have been muddy 50 years ago. Unless a network executive or Mr. Takei himself want to answer it, and I doubt that they would.
I like to interject some levity because I tire of all of these threads about sexism/racism/you name it about something that was really not. I hope your critical thinking class will be able to learn to do just that, think critcally and not adopt whatever opinion they are told.
Why would anyone be shamed if they did not think what they did was shameful? If the reasoning and behavior is something to be proud of, then by all means, be proud. Keep doing it. Use it among educated people, and see if it works.First, I'm not impressed by your bald attempt to shame people by waving your students' reactions in their faces. If you want to refute an argument here, by all means do so, but don't try to pull an "and my minions agree with me."
The inherent trouble with your question is that it can't actually be answered since no one here has access to information which could confirm or deny it. Is it possible neither Sulu or Uhura got a romance because of racism? Is it also possible it just didn't happen because of the luck of the draw? Is either of these things provable unless a smoking gun appears in the form of a memo?
I short, the only answers you're going to get are going to be gut-checked speculation.
I will say "factually" that the production apparently didn't think George was a bad actor. As I recall, one memo regarding the actor contracts actually calls him out as one their "better" actors. I'll try to find it.
I brought up the class reaction as a statement of fact -- if it felt like shaming, then there must be a reason on the part of the person that my students identified and commented on. And students are not "minions." In this case, they are working hard to understand appropriate ways to reason and the fundamentals of using logic, and not straw men arguments or personal attacks, nor dismissing ideas out of hand.
Talk radio and discussion boards like these are excellent "real world" places to see what constitutes argumentation. And the students are doing a fantastic job of identifying the flaws and weaknesses that they see.
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